26 July 2012

Pulp Artist Jerome Rozen

March 1936



Jerome Rozen  was born in Chicago in 1895 but when he was four years old his parents relocated to Flagstaff, Arizona. They moved back to Chicago when he was 15. He had a twin brother named George.


In 1914 the indecisive family once again moved to Arizona. George became a telegraph operator while Jerome studied art.


In 1918 Jerome was drafted into the Army for the World War and was stationed in France, where after the armistice in 1919 he was at liberty to visit the Louvre Museum in Paris. After returning home he decided to attend the Art Institute of Chicago. He graduated in 1921 and by 1923 he was hired as an art instructor. During one semester he even taught his twin brother, George, who had decided to follow Jerome into commercial art.

In 1931 he painted the four earliest original pulp magazine covers for The Shadow, but starting with the January 1932 issue he was suddenly replaced by his brother George, who went on to become The Shadow's more renowned cover artist, while Jerome branched out into the more lucrative and prestigious fields of advertising and slick magazine illustration. He worked for such magazines as Country Home, Boy's Life, Good Housekeeping, Liberty, Pictorial Review, Redbook, and The Saturday Evening Post.

By 1942 Rozen had been out of the fast-paced slick magazine market for four years due to severe injuries in a car accident that took his wife's life.. He was finally able to re-start his career by painting pulp covers for Western Aces, Mystery Magazine, Ten Detective Aces, Wings, Thrilling Adventures, and 10-Story Detective.

1944 ad
After the war, he painted ads for Shell Oil and others, and illustrated magazines such as Boy's Life and Look.
1961 ad



Sep 1935

Dec 1935


Feb 1938


24 July 2012

Captain Canuck

With the renewed talk of a Captain Canuck movie,  I decided it was time for a refresher....

Created by Ron Leishman and Richard Comely, the original Captain Canuck first appeared in July 1975. Comely's art improved over the first series, which lasted 14 issues, until 1981 (a final limited edition issue was published in 2004 to end the story). Two four issue mini-series were produced, one in 1993, the other in 2004.

Since many comicbook fans are unfamiliar with this character, I am posting  a few pages from issue #9, June l 1980, as a sample.







23 July 2012

Space Cadet Coloring Book

From 1952, here are a few pages from the TOM CORBETT SPACE CADET coloring book.













22 July 2012

The Art of Morgan Kane



Morgan Kane graduated from the Cleveland Art Institute in 1942 and spent the remainder of the war years illustrating flying manuals and safety posters. He then went to Chicago and did ads for the likes of Coca-Cola and others.
  In 1951 he broke into magazine illustration, and his worked appeared in Saturday Evening Post, Ladies Home Journal, American Magazine, Esquire, Cosmopolitan, Good Housekeeping, McCall’s, and American Weekly.









1959


Book cover for Ballantine Books "Gentlemen Prefer Blonds" by Anita Loos 









1959 Saturday Evening Post















In 1963 Morgan opened a photo studio, and for the next eleven years created many photo advertisements and hundreds of book covers. Among his credits was the well publicized movie poster for the James Bond film "For Your Eyes Only".